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Sustainable healthy diets

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Mini burger. Credit: Etoile via Pexels
Journal articles
Smaller meat portions contribute the most to reducing meat consumption in the United Kingdom
Researchers found that in the United Kingdom, reduced meat portions had the largest impact on total meat consumption decline (52%), followed by fewer meat-eating days (24%), fewer meat consumers (17%) and fewer meat-eating meal occasions (7%). Understanding meat consumption behaviour patterns is key for more effective policies.
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Photo of healthy meals in restaurant. Credit: Duong Hoa via Pexels
News and resources
Achieving a plant-based diet: Methodology for retailers to track progress toward healthy, sustainable diets
This methodology, developed by WWF, aims to provide a framework for retailers to measure and report their animal versus plant-based sales, progressively enhancing their data collection and reporting capabilities to support a transition to more sustainable and healthy diets.
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A plate with lots of vegetables. Credit: Polina Tankilevitch via Pexels
Reports
Transforming the global food system: A philanthropic return on investment analysis
Advancing a plant-rich food system offers five times the climate benefits per dollar invested compared to renewable energy, and four times that of electric vehicles according to a new report published by Tilt Collective and SystemIQ. 
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Picture of a sculpture depicting an athlete doing discus. Credit: Frans Van Heerden via Pexels.
Think piece
Eco-gastro diplomacy at Paris Olympics
13 million meals served. Zero chicken nuggets. 60% vegetarian. All fruit and vegetables, dairy, meat, eggs and cereals are sourced from France – pears from Nantes, lentils from Lyon, and Tomme cheese from Bordeaux. They’re even turning 40 tonnes of used coffee into fertiliser. At the Paris Olympic Games, France is keen to show off its culinary prestige to the 15,000 athletes, 20,000 journalists and millions of spectators. But this time, it’s with a green twist. 
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Front cover of book with graphics of school food
Books
Transforming School Food Politics around the World
This book explores how to successfully challenge and transform public school-food programs with insights from eight countries across the Global North and South. They argue that the transformative potential of school food hinges on valuing the gendered labor that goes into caring for, feeding, and educating children. This book is free to read online. 
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Man purchasing food at market. Photo by Qamar Rehman via Pexels
Journal articles
The affordability gap for nutritious diets
This article explores the affordability gap, or the difference between a household’s actual spending on food and the lowest cost of meeting nutrient needs for that household. The authors of this study look to advance previous research from the Fill the Nutrient Gap analyses done by the World Food Programme. They encourage tracking and monitoring of the affordability gap to support better social assistance programs to make nutrient-adequate diets more affordable. 
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Headshot of Amy Styring
Podcast episode
What's a natural diet? (with Amy Styring)
What do new lab techniques reveal about the diets of our ancestors?
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An aerial view of an agricultural landscape with pastures, fields of oil rape seed and forests. Photo by rainerh11 via pixabay
Journal articles
Potential unintended consequences of agricultural land use change driven by dietary transitions
This review article focuses on the practical implications for livestock farmers and their pastures of a shift towards a plant-based diet in the UK. The authors argue that the majority of pastures are unsuitable for conversion to arable land because of their soil type, making them unreliable sites for plant-based protein production.
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Photo of a woman shopping in a grocery store. Image by Viki Mohamad via Unsplash
Journal articles
What consumers want in a sustainability food label
This article aims to explore the consumer perceptions and preferences for sustainability in food production and food labels through interactive workshops conducted in the UK, Ireland, and Denmark. The researchers find that consumers lack necessary information to assess the sustainability of food products. Consumers in this study said that food retailers and producers must take more responsibility for providing public information and awareness campaigns. 
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